Any idea where they hid the long press feature? I've been searching for an hour now...

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not exactly sure what the long press settings are...
but they are probably under Settings > Language & input > Android Keyboard (settings on the right)
bunch of settings in there and you can hit advanced at the bottom for a few more.

not exactly sure what the long press settings are...
but they are probably under Settings > Language & input > Android Keyboard (settings on the right)
bunch of settings in there and you can hit advanced at the bottom for a few more.

i hope that helps!

Sorry for the obscure reference long press for the back key, so you can kill app, instead of hitting back button over and over. I looked in that area, so it must be a feature not included yet.

For the past couple of days, I spent a lot of time playing with all (?) 3 of the new ICS builds. With various patching contortions, I got most of the functions working. I even tried an additional kernel flash topaly around with overclocking.

Bottom line: none of them are close to prime-time, compared to my daily CM7 nightly, slight OC, slight UV. It's not just the missing features, but the speed and responsiveness.

It is very early, and I thank all the devs for putting ICS out in several flavors already. But as of right now, stick with Gingerbread.

For the past couple of days, I spent a lot of time playing with all (?) 3 of the new ICS builds. With various patching contortions, I got most of the functions working. I even tried an additional kernel flash topaly around with overclocking.

Bottom line: none of them are close to prime-time, compared to my daily CM7 nightly, slight OC, slight UV. It's not just the missing features, but the speed and responsiveness.

It is very early, and I thank all the devs for putting ICS out in several flavors already. But as of right now, stick with Gingerbread.

This build is my daily driver now, but I'd be kidding myself if i said it was stable. Few reboot and battery pulls since yesterday morning. But I'm OK with that, I got ICS!

Some great work by all the dev's working on this...I'm gonna try to stick with ICS until it's officially released, or I get a GN, which ever comes first!

Sorry for the obscure reference long press for the back key, so you can kill app, instead of hitting back button over and over. I looked in that area, so it must be a feature not included yet.

Awesome so far otherwise!

Sent from my Nexus S 4G using Tapatalk

You can always long press the home button and the selectivlely kill any app by swiping it left or right.

Long pressing the back button to kill was never an AOSP feature but it was picked up from CM by several custom ROMs. I'm sure we'll see it resurface as work continues on CM9 and these early ports stabelize and new custom flavors are released.

Using GLaDOS release 5 for ICS(put that on the rom this morning), no reboots since I threw the v9 on my phone last night. OC to 1400, if so desired, although I have only pushed it to 1100. BLN works, just not blinking BLN, missing liblights or something. DEEP-IDLE, etc, etc. See post below:

The one thing I did notice, was that with stock build of Koush's alpha v9 on CDMA has the ability to set data limits in the data usage section. After the kernel, no dice. I have reported that, but since with sprint having unlimited Data, it is not as big of concern to me as a snappier ROM is.

Using GLaDOS release 5 for ICS(put that on the rom this morning), no reboots since I threw the v9 on my phone last night. OC to 1400, if so desired, although I have only pushed it to 1100. BLN works, just not blinking BLN, missing liblights or something. DEEP-IDLE, etc, etc. See post below:

The one thing I did notice, was that with stock build of Koush's alpha v9 on CDMA has the ability to set data limits in the data usage section. After the kernel, no dice. I have reported that, but since with sprint having unlimited Data, it is not as big of concern to me as a snappier ROM is.

I hope Sprint never takes that away from us, unlimited data that is...

Right now, its the only thing distinguishing them from the other big two carriers.